One of the most hilarious things to me is Americans whacking other countries for being corrupt. Russia is a favorite target, but the US abuses virtually every non-Western country for “corruption.” I’ve pointed out before that this is absurd. There is no more corrupt country in the world than the US. The bank bailouts were [...]

On a related note, Nicolas Kristoff wrote a post last Sunday on how we’re being too hard on Obama. He’s worried that the recent elections in Spain and other European countries under pressure demonstrate impatience with socialist and other more liberal political parties. Why that should affect Obama is a mystery. He doesn’t appear to have a liberal bone in his body. Then Kristoff goes through the presidential campaign talking points:

In this economic crisis, Obama will face the same headwinds. That should provide a bracing warning to grumbling Democrats: If you don’t like the way things are going right now, just wait.

President Obama came into office with expectations that Superman couldn’t have met. Many on the left believed what the right feared: that Obama was an old-fashioned liberal. But the president’s cautious centrism soured the left without reassuring the right.

Like many, I have disappointments with Obama. He badly underestimated the length of this economic crisis, and for a man with a spectacular gift at public speaking, he has been surprisingly inept at communicating.

But as we approach an election year, it is important to acknowledge the larger context: Obama has done better than many critics on the left or the right give him credit for.

He took office in the worst recession in more than half a century, amid fears of a complete economic implosion. As The Onion, the satirical news organization, described his election at the time: “Black Man Given Nation’s Worst Job.”

The administration helped tug us back from the brink of economic ruin. Obama oversaw an economic stimulus that, while too small, was far larger than the one House Democrats had proposed. He rescued the auto industry and achieved health care reform that presidents have been seeking since the time of Theodore Roosevelt.

{{rolling eyes}}

I noticed that Kristoff was careful to say that Obama signed a fair pay act into law. That must mean that they have discovered that women are onto the Lilly Ledbetter maneuver. Raise your hands, ladies, if you feel like your pay with your male colleagues has been equalized. Don’t worry that you don’t know what their salaries are. Everything can be quantified. Compare the cars you have, the houses you live in, working spouse or stay at home, how many kids you have. Are your male colleagues living your lifestyle?

Then there are things Obama has actually made worse. Like, setting an example in the White House for the way the Old Boys Network works and then not holding anyone accountable for it. Don’t think there aren’t guys out there who are now comfortable screwing with their female colleagues’ career in order to get ahead. It happens ALL THE TIME. Obama is a master of it. It’s part of the reason why he won the nomination in 2008. We witnessed it. Maybe Kristoff doesn’t think this is important. I notice that he spends a commendable amount of time detailing sex slavery in the developing world. But what would he find close to home if he started to delve into gender inequality at work? Nick? You want to take that on? Or do you just want to wring your hands in growing panic over Obama’s re-election prospects? I suppose women are going to hear that their concerns are not that important now that the economy is falling.

Anyway, we’re not that impressed with Obama’s “achievements”. By the way, Nick, did you know the COBRA subsidy that was to help those of us unemployed afford to cover our health insurance costs expired in September? Yup. Do you have any idea how much COBRA costs these days when all you get is unemployment? Health care reform isn’t going to make those costs disappear, Nick. There’s no fricking competition from a public option. Oh, and while he was putting together that pathetic Affordable (you’ve GOT to be kidding) Care Act, he was busy ignoring the recommendation of his economic advisor Christina Romer to dedicate $100 billion to put the unemployed back to work. Do you know how many scientists in NJ could be put back to work discovering new drugs on even 1% of that money? And let’s talk about how he handled the termination of the Bush Tax Cuts for the wealthy. Oh, that’s right, he *didn’t* terminate them. And he didn’t help families stay in their homes with HAMP. And he didn’t arrest the bankers. He didn’t appoint Elizabeth Warren to the agency that she created. And he hasn’t helped protect womens’ reproductive rights. Jeez, the list goes on and on. Some of these things are fairly simple fixes and would have cost very little political capital. But he didn’t do them anyway. Why, Nick? WHY??

Kristoff goes out of his way to blame the circumstances into which Obama’s presidency was born for his failure to really accomplish anything. Oh, wait, doesn’t that contradict the rest of this column that lauds Obama’s achievements? Whatever. As I recall, Obama wanted this job bad. He wanted it so badly that he was willing to abandon all scruples to get it. The DNC put itself out for the money men so it could elect pliant, docile Democrats who would do as they were told. But it was Obama who with a paltry 142 days on the job in Washington, DC decided that he was supremely qualified to be president in the aftermath of the disastrous Bush years. And let us not be stupid about this, the collapse of the subprime market started to happen in 2007. You didn’t have to be a Wall Street banker to know that the crash was going to happen. You just needed to check the real estate section of the local paper. There was no way in hell that wages were keeping pace with house prices.

But Obama had to have this job. It’s not like we didn’t have options. There was another candidate who was more suited to handle an economic catastrophe. She got the shaft, along with the voters in the big, reliable Democratic states and Obama took the prize. The Democrats should not be surprised that working class voters in swing states like Pennsylvania are not enthusiastic about voting for him. They *had* their champion and she was stabbed in the back. What did they get in return? How has Obama improved their lives? He was supposed to be the better candidate, right? Otherwise the party wouldn’t have nominated him, right? You can’t really expect those voters to believe that now.

Presumably, Obama’s voters were convinced that he was the creme de la creme. There wasn’t anyone better. The Democratic party really pulled out the stops when it nominated Obama. He is the most Democratic and bestest and excellence personified. It simply can not get better than Obama. He is the most-ut. If that’s the way they truly felt, they had an obligation to put as much pressure as they possibly could on him to get him to perform. After all, they stomped all over Clinton voters and women practically screaming, “Shut up and DIE, you stupid, old, uneducated, working class idiots!” Those Clinton voters were tossed aside and their concerns were ignored in the wake of Obama’s “historic” victory. He ought to have paid more attention to them and his supporters should have stopped the funky-chicken-in-the-endzone back in 2008. (Note to Kristoff google + commenters, one of the biggest problems Obama has to deal with is his own obnoxious supporters. Drop the sarcastic “magic Hillary” remarks. They’re in extremely poor taste or haven’t you learned anything yet.)

Giving him a pass and making excuses for his poor performance was not the best strategy for winning friends and influencing people. Nor was writing the non-Obama voters off. Or calling them racists, or stupid, or uneducated. Instead of treating him with kid gloves, his supporters should have been whacking him like a piñata in 2009 to make him conform to Democratic party principles. They would not and he didn’t. Now, he can do pretty much anything he pleases and data mine the precincts, tweaking his message to squeak a teeny advantage here and there. Will it be enough? Does it matter if he doesn’t resemble the president you thought you voted for the first time?

I guess it’s our fault as voters that we do not appreciate him. We shouldn’t have gotten ourselves unemployed and foreclosed. We should have taken better care of his legacy. But it’s a funny thing that happens when you lose everything. Suddenly, someone else’s hyperbolic frenzy to retain power just doesn’t seem very important anymore. Maybe Obama should have been paying greater attention to the bottom layer of Maslow’s pyramid. Oh, well, too late now.

Kristoff closes with:

I’m hoping the European elections will help shock Democrats out of their orneriness so that they accept the reality that we’ll be facing not a referendum, but a choice. For a couple of years, the left has joined the right in making Obama a piñata. That’s fair: it lets off steam, and it’s how we keep politicians in line.

But think back to 2000. Many Democrats and journalists alike, feeling grouchy, were dismissive of Al Gore and magnified his shortcomings. We forgot the context, prided ourselves on our disdainful superiority — and won eight years of George W. Bush.

This time, let’s do a better job of retaining perspective. If we turn Obama out of office a year from now, let’s make sure it is because the Republican nominee is preferable, not just out of grumpiness toward the incumbent during a difficult time.

I completely agree with Kristoff here. There is a choice. If the Democrats are starting to worry about their chances in November 2012, they could choose to change their lineup. That would be the sensible, bold, leaderly thing to do. We Democrats in Exile do not want four more years of Obama. That is what those poll numbers are telling you, Democrats. The party that wins next November is the one that has the most motivated voters. Right now, the Republicans are chomping at the bit. They’ll fall into line once they have a nominee. That’s what Republicans do. They’re good at following orders.

Democrats? Ehhhhh, not so much. Right now, I can’t think of one reason why I would voluntarily go to the polls to cast a vote for a guy who doesn’t take a firm stand for *anything* I believe in. Do I want the Republicans to win? Of course not. But that assumes that the Democrats are not going to offer me a better choice next year. And that infuriates me. If they aren’t going to offer me a choice, they deserve to lose. This is a no-brainer, guys. The Democrats have to motivate the party and give the public options. Take Obama out of the game and put in another player. Obama is not the best you can do. There are at least three candidates I can think of off the top of my head who would be better. Choose one and stop the hand wringing. Otherwise, I’m going to find a third party candidate and vote for that person. I understand the strategic implications of this decision for the Democrats. The question is, do the Democrats understand that I and millions of others are serious? What’s important to them? Maintaining power at any cost and risking it all if they lose or actually doing what is right?

This is not a game. I’m getting sick of the psychological manipulation techniques and the guilt trips. All I can see is the number of people I know who are out of work, including me, in a high technology industry that is being decimated by the same smug bonus class that forced Obama down our throats. And that school lunch program applicant increase?

They told me the radiation treatments would make me tired. They did. On the last day, they said, "It'll get worse before it gets better." They were right, but they didn't tell me how much worse. It's like my entire body is in open rebellion. Also, alien skin. Yikes. I really gotta post these links before it's suddenly September. […]